Godlessness Rises 266% In Three Decades In The USA
It is said that America is “one nation under God,” but that is increasingly less so than before. In the past thirty years, agnosticism or atheism has exploded, now making up the beliefs of almost one quarter of Americans. Christians constitute now a mere 56% of the total population, and the numbers are still declining according to a report:
The number of Americans who identify as having no religion has risen 266 percent since 1991, to now tie statistically with the number of Catholics and Evangelicals, according to a new survey.
People with no religion – known as ‘nones’ among statisticians – account for 23.1 percent of the U.S. population, while Catholics make up 23 percent and Evangelicals account for 22.5 percent, according to the General Social Survey.
Those three groups now represent the largest the religious groups in America.
The survey has tracked a broad swath of American trends since 1972, offering comprehensive insight into the evolving face of religion over more than four decades.
Ryan Burge, a political science professor at Eastern Illinois University who analyzed the data, said that experts have several theories about why the number of ‘nones’ has risen so dramatically in recent decades.
‘One of them is that many people used to lie about what they were,’ he told DailyMail.com. ‘Many people were (always) atheist or non-religious, but it was previously culturally unacceptable to not have a religion in America.’
Shifting political ideologies about social issues has also played a role, with fewer Americans comfortable with the rhetoric of their religious leaders.
‘Another (theory) is that the religious right kind of cleaved moderate Christianity and a lot of moderate Christians who were moderately attached said they didn’t want to defend Jerry Falwell … and all the anti-gay and anti- abortion religious rights leaders,’ Burge said. ‘So they said, ‘You know what? I’m out.’
As the ‘nones’ have ascended, the number of mainline Protestant Christians has fallen 62.5 percent since 1982, to now account for just 10.8 percent of the U.S. population, according to the survey.
The number of Catholics has gone up and down over the decades, cumulatively decreasing more than 4 percentage points from 27.3 percent in 1972.
However, that indicates an overall stability for that religion, despite the decades of sexual abuse scandals that have plagued the Church, Burge said.
‘Catholicism is more cultural than religious in a lot of ways,’ he said. ‘People are less and less likely to disaffiliate from Catholicism than Protestantism, which is less cultural in that people are willing to walk away from it.’
Mainline Christianity is dying. -Ryan Burge, Eastern Illinois University
Burge said that America is on a trajectory to become increasingly less religious going forward – following a pattern that has already emerged in Europe’s most developed countries, including those in Scandinavia.‘The big questions is what next in terms of what religion is going to look like in America,’ he said. ‘Secularization theory argues that as countries become more industrialized and prosperous then the throwing off of religion becomes more normalized.’
Burge has seen the overall shifts first hand in his role as a pastor at an American Baptist church.
‘My church is on the decline,’ he said. ‘We had 50 (congregants) in 2005 and now we have 15. We’re probably going to have to close (in a few years).’
‘Mainline Christianity is dying,’ he added. ‘It’s at least going away. It makes me feel more comfortable that it’s not my fault or my church’s fault. It’s part of a bigger trend that’s happening.’ (source, source)
People may ask why this is happening, and it is a good question. However, what one must also look at is the change in the society.
It was almost thirty years ago, for example, that the “gay manifesto” was released. One may read more about it in the archives, but it declared that it will be able to in the next three decades bring the US to support the LGBT.
Its prediction was less than its results, as it did far more than just this.
Now this is not to say that the decline of Christianity is to be blamed solely on the LGBT. This would be incorrect. Rather, it is to say that as the Bible says the LGBT is a sign of serious sin where God gives up on a people and turns them to their sin, it is to say that the Western world gave up on God and is now reaping the consequences of their actions. This is a process that began a long time ago, and has for the most part continued without cessation.
The decline of Christianity then should not be a surprise, and one that increases with each passing generation, because if those before did not follow the tenets, then barring a major change that is made by choice, it is only natural that the future should eventually see the rise of godlessness and all the rotten fruits it bears.
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